U.S. regulator stands by decision to block Winklevoss
bitcoin ETF
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[July 27, 2018]
By Trevor Hunnicutt and Michelle Price
NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday stood by a decision
blocking an exchange-traded fund that would have tracked bitcoin, citing
concerns about market manipulation.
The securities regulator found "unpersuasive" arguments that the bitcoin
ETF proposed by Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, the twin brothers who
founded crypto exchange Gemini Trust Co LLC, would be sufficiently
protected from manipulation, it said in a 92-page analysis posted on its
website https://bit.ly/2K3GoWG
"Regulated bitcoin-related markets are in the early stages of their
development," the SEC said, saying that it "cannot...conclude that
bitcoin markets are uniquely resistant to manipulation."
But the SEC did not completely shut the door to such products coming to
market once the bitcoin market has matured, offering some hope for at
least five other bitcoin ETF proposals that are still pending before the
regulator.
Bitcoin turned negative after the SEC's ruling, and last traded down 2.9
percent.
The virtual currency can be used to move money around the world quickly
and with relative anonymity, without the need for a central authority,
such as a bank or government. A fund holding the currency could attract
more investors and push its price higher.
The SEC said there was not enough evidence that efforts to thwart
manipulation of the ETF's price or that of the underlying bitcoin market
would be successful.
The SEC had blocked the Winklevoss ETF from coming to market in March
2017, but then faced an appeal from exchange operator CBOE's Bats
exchange, which applied to list the ETF.
The CBOE said it was reviewing both the SEC's notice and Commissioner
Hester Peirce's dissent.
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Brothers Cameron (L) and Tyler Winklevoss talk to each other as they
attend a New York State Department of Financial Services (DFS)
virtual currency hearing in the Manhattan borough of New York
January 28, 2014. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
"Investors are better served by products traded on a regulated securities market
and protected by robust securities laws and we will continue to work with the
SEC and ETF issuers to construct a fully regulated product," said Chris
Concannon, chief operating officer of CBOE Global Markets.
The parties can appeal the SEC's decision in federal court.
Gemini did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The Winklevoss twins are best known for their feud with Facebook Inc founder
Mark Zuckerberg over whether he stole the idea for what became the world's most
popular social networking website from them. The former Olympic rowers
ultimately settled their legal dispute, which was dramatized in the 2010 film
"The Social Network."
The SEC's decision to block the ETF was voted for 3-1 by its sitting
commissioners, with Peirce voting against. In a statement, Peirce said she
believed the product met the legal standard.
"More institutional participation would ameliorate many of the Commission's
concerns with the bitcoin market that underlie its disapproval order," she said,
adding that the ruling "sends a strong signal that innovation is unwelcome in
our markets."
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt in New York and Michelle Price in Washington;
additional reporting by Anna Irrera in New York; editing by Phil Berlowitz and
Leslie Adler)
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